Hong Kong and artificial intelligence can be a winning combination

A humanoid “NAO” robot from Japan’s NEC Corp demonstrates its skills at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in March. Photo: AFP
Your online poll, “Should Hong Kong schools change the way children are taught in the age of AI?” was an excellent conversation starter about Hong Kong’s place in the burgeoning global scene for artificial intelligence technology.

Nearly 80 per cent of respondents agreed education should change, yet agreeing how and what should change is a different matter. AI and its social implications are often greatly misunderstood, and, as a founder of Hong Kong’s premier machine learning (ML) and AI training provider, there’s one myth I’d particularly like to squash.

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